Pilates vs. Yoga

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  • I'm just adding this, since someone "actually" took issue with my earlier informative post:

    German-born fitness innovator Joseph H. Pilates (1881-1967) developed the Pilates exercise system in the 1920s. His interest in physical fitness stemmed from a determination to strengthen his own body and improve his health after a sickly childhood. With a background in yoga, Zen meditation, martial arts and other ancient fitness techniques plus some success as a gymnast, diver and boxer, Joseph Pilates devised a unique sequence of movements that worked the mind and muscle in harmony.

    He fine-tuned his wellness regimen while interned in England during the First World War, claiming it helped him and his fellow internees resist an influenza epidemic. Working as an orderly at an infirmary, he engineered a way to rig springs on hospital beds to offer light resistance exercises to bedridden patients, and thus the seed for Pilates equipment was planted.

    After the war, Joseph Pilates moved to New York and with his wife, Clara, opened up a studio near the New York City Ballet in 1926. It wasn't long before he drew a following with dancers who took to Pilates for its ability to create long, lean muscles and a strong, streamlined physique. Legends Martha Graham and George Balanchine were among his clientele.

    In 1945, Joseph Pilates published Return to Life Through Contrology, which described his philosophical approach to exercise. Soon, some of his students began opening studios of their own - some making subtle adaptations to the method - and word of Pilates slowly spread.

    Pilates didn't really hit the big time, however, until the 1990s. The mind-body movement took off as baby boomers started seeking gentler paths to health and wellness. Ancient techniques such as yoga and tai chi enjoyed a resurgence of popularity and Pilates followed suit.
  • Excellent synopsis!
  • Well excuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuse me for trying to provide a more complete picture of the system than you did in your initial brief, misleading post. As you yourself state, it wasn't developed "for dancers." I was simply trying to correct what seemed to be (and was actually) a restatement of a common misperception.

    Jeez. Don't bother replying, I won't be revisiting this thread.

    And, it would be nice (no, it is standard ethical practice) to provide a source citation when you copy-and-paste text written by someone else.
  • Here's the site the information was taken from - it's a commercial site, and where they got the information, I'm not taking time to discover. http://www.pilatesinsight.com/pilate...s-history.aspx